Am Freitag, 16. August 2013 schrieb Ralf Mardorf:
> On Fri, 2013-08-16 at 10:30 +0200, Jochen Spieker wrote:
> > Ethan Rosenberg, PhD:
> > > I have a usb drive, with data on it, that I [stupidly!!] tried to
> > > name using fdisk. Of course, it erased the data. I have not used
> > > the drive sin
On Fri, 2013-08-16 at 10:30 +0200, Jochen Spieker wrote:
> Ethan Rosenberg, PhD:
> >
> > I have a usb drive, with data on it, that I [stupidly!!] tried to
> > name using fdisk. Of course, it erased the data. I have not used
> > the drive since then. I think there is a method to "unformat" a
> >
On Fri, 2013-08-16 at 01:06 -0400, Ethan Rosenberg, PhD wrote:
> I think there is a method to "unformat" a drive. What shall
> I do now?
Do you really mean "unformat"? Unformatted you can't use it anymore.
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Ethan Rosenberg, PhD:
>
> I have a usb drive, with data on it, that I [stupidly!!] tried to
> name using fdisk. Of course, it erased the data. I have not used
> the drive since then. I think there is a method to "unformat" a
> drive. What shall I do now?
Generally, it should be possible to acc
On Fri, Aug 16, 2013 at 01:06:35AM -0400, Ethan Rosenberg, PhD wrote:
> Dear List -
>
> I have a usb drive, with data on it, that I [stupidly!!] tried to
> name using fdisk. Of course, it erased the data. I have not used
> the drive since then. I think there is a method to "unformat" a
> drive.
Dear List -
I have a usb drive, with data on it, that I [stupidly!!] tried to name
using fdisk. Of course, it erased the data. I have not used the drive
since then. I think there is a method to "unformat" a drive. What shall
I do now?
TIA
Ethan
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